CHAPTER 27
The Tracy Family History
Pennsylvania
Off to America
1724
Scotland,
theoretically, and off and on, was an independent country until their union with
England in 1707. The Scots never established themselves, by charter, in the
American colonies. Other countries established colonies in America, but there
was never a Scottish Jamestown. They would come as individuals, sea captains, etc...,
but never as a country.
There were many
Scots in the colonies before our Woods and Wallaces arrived in 1724.
The poorer Scots would sell their services in advance for a number of years,
receiving free passage, room and board. After a specific agreed upon number of
years as indentured servants, they were free to go on their own. Many Scots were
shipped to the colonies as prisoners of war after they had lost battles with the
English. Cromwell sent many Scot prisoners to America.
The Scots would provide cheap labor and expertise in almost all areas. Many
would become the nations' presidents.
Four things were apparent when our people got on board that boat in Ulster in 1724:
1. There were a lot of our people on that ship.
2. If our Woods were English, they were now no longer Episcopalian. There are
simply no records, or family history, of any of our people being Episcopalian in
the colonies: Except! I will come to this later in chapter 31.
3. Michael Woods, although English, was the leader of our clans. The Lowlanders
would immigrate to the colonies as individuals, establishing themselves by use
of their individual talents. The Highlanders had a tendency to immigrate as
families, clans, headed by the chief. This is another reason to believe our Wallaces were originally Highlanders. It is possible that Michael Woods
traveled from England to Scotland, where he married, then on to Ulster. (Note:
Elizabeth Woods was the oldest at the time of immigration. Her age was 42. Her husband
Michael Woods was 40.)
4. So massive were the immigrations that over the years fully one-third of the
population of Ulster would immigrate. This means that two-thirds of the
population remained in Ulster. It is known that many of our people stayed behind
during the exodus of 1724. There is every reason to believe that we have cousins
in Ulster today.
“This Mrs. Barrett referred to in Note 5 is personally acquainted with quite a
number of Woodses now living in Ireland, who are descendant of John Woods and
Elizabeth Worsop and who occupy positions of prominence and honor in the various
walks of life. – Neander Woods, 1905
As for the time
of passage crossing the Atlantic: The library researched the subject and said
that if the weather was good, the voyage from Ulster to the Colonies in those
years took 7-8 weeks. The McDowells cross in 1729 taking 4 months, twice the
normal time. Nothing is certain. The McDowells come back into our story.
Taking an Atlantic crossing by sail was not like a
Carnival cruise. There were storms, sickness, always many deaths, even
starvation.
Our people
landed at New Castle, Delaware. (Some say Philadelphia.) This entire area was a
stronghold for the Presbyterians. It was a few miles south of Philadelphia. It
became a rallying point for the Scotch-Irish from Ulster.
The Presbyterian immigrant ships would, also, land in the ports of
the Southern colonies (preferably those ports controlled by the Quakers),
avoiding the northern ports of New England. The Puritans controlled the New
England colonies.
The Puritans fled the tyranny of England to establish their
own tyranny in the New England colonies. They were really mean. No man could
vote unless he was a member of the church. He must not only be a member of the
church, but also a member in good standing. The Baptists were run out. They
would take a red-hot rod and run it through the tongues of the Quakers. Then the
Quakers, with holes in their tongues, were ordered out of New England. If they
did not go fast enough they were hanged.
The Puritans did not treat their own any better,
including the elite. They hung one of their own ministers because he did not
believe in witchcraft. (He was obviously not a member in good standing.) The
Scots gave a try at living in the New England colonies. Our "barbarians" were
not welcome. They were treated rather shabbily.
After 1720, the Ulster Scotch simply stayed away from the
Puritan ports. Now you see why our people landed at New Castle. (America was
founded upon the principle of religious freedom?)
Not all of the Scottish or Ulster Scot immigrants were poor.
There is no reason to believe that our people were destitute when they landed in
America.
I do not believe that our people just boarded a ship one day
and sailed off to America without planning in advance. I suspect that they had
relatives already in the colonies and were probably met at the dock, taken in
and helped by kin. Our cousin Mildred Bailey in Leeton, Missouri, (She has done
a lot of research, see chapter 9.) tells me what I always suspected: Our people lived in
communities together, immigrated together, established new communities together,
and intermarried. In some cases she has documentation. The clans always
provided for one another.
They were unique in this respect. The other nationalities
quite often immigrated as church congregations: Not the Scotch-Irish. Their
ministers rarely immigrated with their congregations.
The Presbyterians crossed Maryland, but did not settle there.
To live in Maryland you had to pay tithes. Our people had bitter experiences
with tithes in Ulster. The Scots would establish themselves, temporarily, and
sometimes permanently, in Pennsylvania. By the time of the Revolutionary War,
one-third of the population of Pennsylvania were not just Scots, but Ulster
Scots.
Many Scotch immigrants took the following route: From Ulster
to Pennsylvania, into Virginia, then North Carolina, and then into the “Waxhaws”
in South Carolina. The “Waxhaws” is an Indian name…and would remain in bitter
memory of the Wallace cousins to this day. That is getting ahead of the story.
William Penn's father was highly placed, being Admiral of the
Navy. He counted among his friends the King and those of highest birth and
position. Penn's father had loaned the King a large sum of money. When the
father died the rights to the estate went to the son. The King, unable to repay
the loan, gave the son the entire colony of Pennsylvania.
Being Quakers, they were overly honest. Penn purchased the
land of Pennsylvania from the Indians, although he had a legal grant from the
King and had no legal obligation to give the Indians anything. He could have
treated them just like the Irish. Thus, the land was purchased twice. Not only
did he buy the land from the Indians, but also paid fair market value.
Although it was the western frontier, it was no longer Indian
Territory.
William Penn wanted to set upon the earth "Utopia," called Pennsylvania. All
were welcome, almost. However, only those who believed Jesus Christ to be the
Son of God were allowed to settle.
For the time, the colony was unbelievably liberal, and
democratic. All men were treated equally, almost. There was democracy and freedom
for all, almost. There were elected legislatures. An accused was to be tried
before a jury in their own land. Indians were allowed to sit on the juries with
the whites. They did not believe in Kings. They did not believe in witchcraft.
However, many prominent Quakers owned slaves. They were
needed to work the plantations. William Penn himself owned slaves. However, he
provided that upon his death they would be freed. When he died the family sold
the slaves. In 1729, the slave market in Philadelphia was flooded with slaves.
In early American history, everyone, and I mean everyone, was
involved in land speculation, including George Washington. The American
philosophy was to gain rights to a large tract of land, then sub-divide and sell
the land to the mass of foreign immigrants, or existing farmers who wanted a
better deal. You can easily understand the math. The math almost never worked
out as the American land speculators rarely, if ever, made a profit. (As we
shall see, some of the colonial land speculators made a fortune. However, the
Americans after the Revolutionary War did not fare so well.)
We have seen that the English philosophy was totally
opposite. Their theory was to gain title to the land, then rent it forever and
ever. They did not sell. In England today the upper class still owns the land
that has been in the family for hundreds of years. And, they still rent. The
largest landowner in England today is the queen.
Upon receiving the grant, William Penn immediately sold large
lots to his wealthy Quaker friends in order to raise the large amount of money
to create "Utopia."
Now cometh, in the year of 1724, our people…to Pennsylvania.
William Penn had died a few years earlier, but the family, and their wealthy
Quaker friends, still owned the land. There was a classic breakdown in
communications between the ruling Quakers and our Scotch-Irish. Our people came
into the colony under the British flag. It was their understanding that any
unsettled land was free for the taking. They owed no allegiance to the colony of
Pennsylvania.
Michael Woods led our clan to the west of the settled country in
Pennsylvania, to land that was vacant. They selected the high land, with few
trees, easy to clear. According to the custom of the time, they would have built
log cabins. This clearing of the land and using the trees to build log cabins
would be a pattern repeated by our people for many generations.
Historian, Ruth Petracek, believes our people to be, at
least, of the upper-middle class. It is possible they had enough money to have
cabins built for them in advance of their arrival.
I point this out because there were many Scots who arrived in
the colonies destitute. They had used their last penny for passage. (Note of
historical interest: Passage in 1723 was $22.50.) Those who had not enough money
would bind themselves to work for three to six years to repay the shipmaster for
their passage. If a man died at sea, the widow was then obligated for the
passage of the husband, herself, and the children. When reaching port, the
families would be literally ripped apart with the women and children taken by
different owners to work off their debts as indentured servants. The children
would face a long bondage as they could be indentured for eighteen to twenty-one
years. If you had a cruel master, being indentured or bonded could be as brutal
as being a slave.
Those who arrived destitute on the frontier were forced to
live in caves or tents until they could earn enough money to build a log cabin.
Our people were not from this poorer class. They probably financed
the preparations, passage, and settling in the colonies, the standard way for
the landed class in Ulster. Having lived in London, England, some years ago, I
am familiar with their peculiar ways of dealing with property. In America, if
you want to set up a business you drive down the street until you see a building
you like with a “for rent” sign in the window. You sign the lease and in a few
days you are in business. This is not the way it is done in Britain. Land is so
rare that you first have a difficult time just finding a building available.
When I was there in 1973, I was dealing with a Realtor who was desperately
trying to find almost 20 locations for McDonalds, who were about to move into
London. These buildings have long-term leases, more than 100 years. You must
first purchase from the previous lease owner, the right to the lease. Let us say
they want $50,000 up front for the right to take over the lease. Then you take
over the annual lease (rental) payments. When you want to move out of the
building, you now sell your right to the lease for let us say $75,000. Over the
long life of the lease the building can go through as many as 15 to 20
different hands.
The Ulster Scots would sell their rights to the long-term
leases on the property (farms), thus financing their immigration.
Our people gradually worked their way from the Chitoques
Creek to Swatara and on to Paxtang Creek.
It is hard today to go back in time and understand the
country as it then existed. There were a few port towns (not even big enough by
today's standards to be called cities): Boston, New Castle, Philadelphia,
etc.…Their populations were only a few thousand. Stretching for only a few miles
inland were the farms: Beyond that were the unknown Indian Territories. As you
can see from the map, our people settled in the area of Donegal, next to the
Susquehanna River. This was only 70-80 miles from the port of Philadelphia (50
miles from New Castle) …beyond civilization.
There was one little problem that our people had about the
land they selected to live on…it was not for sale. The Quakers (By Quakers I
mean the Pennsylvania government.) wanted long term leases, “quit-rents”. Our
people had had it with renting land in Ulster. They told the Quaker officials
that they were not going to take any long term leases, or short term leases, or
pay any rent, period! They simply became squatters. The result was that many of
our people lived in Donegal Township for 15 years before they received a title
to the land they lived on.
From the beginning of the colony some fifty years earlier,
William Penn provided the land at such a low rate that even the poor could
afford to live there. If one could not afford to purchase than they could rent.
It would appear that even if you purchased the land, in addition, you still had
to pay an annual quit-rent.
By 1729, when our people were in Lancaster Co., land sales
and quit-rents made the proprietors wealthy. But not by our people! Our family
was not going to pay rent to the Quakers. They were not going to pay rent to the
British. They were not going to pay rent to the Indians. Our people simply were not
going to pay rent... again, period!
It wasn't just our people who refused to pay rent. There were
thousands of Scots who went into this unsettled country, and flat-out refused to
pay rents. They were"…bold and indignant strangers, saying as their excuse when
challenged for titles, that we had solicited for colonists and they had come
accordingly.”
The historian Dr. William H. Egle explains: "The Scotch-Irish
were not treated with the same consideration accorded the Germans or Swiss. The
latter could locate ANYWHERE, the former, not! The Scotch-Irish settled on the
manor Conestoga and were removed by FORCE. Their cabins were burned and they
were told to go elsewhere. The Germans immediately occupied this land from which
the Scotch-Irish had been driven and warrants for the land were granted to them
shortly afterwards. All except 500 acres of this celebrated manor was taken up
by German settlers. The Scotch-Irish were then pushed beyond Swatara an Conewago,
where they were allowed to remain. However, in the case of many, it was ten or
fifteen years before they were afforded the privilege to take out warrants for
it. Applications were made AT ONCE but many years elapsed before the warrant was
insured."
The Quakers (The manager of Pennsylvania was himself
Scot-Irish.) did not know what to make of our "Wild Scots." The other
nationalities, especially the Germans (Deutscher), were more than happy to accept
the Quaker's terms. They worked hard and prospered, even to this day.
The Quakers tolerated the Scotch-Irish because they made a
perfect buffer between the other peaceful settlers and the Indians. There were
problems with the Indians. You never knew what they were going to do. For the
first fifty years the Indians were relatively peaceful, then, when our people
were there, the Indians started acting up. The Quakers were pacifists, but being
pragmatic they would let the Scots fight the Indians for them, and look the
other way. To our people, after what they had been through in Scotland and
Ulster; being tortured and scalped by the Indians was a "piece-of-cake." So the
Scotch-Irish were tolerated and given special considerations. They were allowed
to locate anywhere and even exempted from certain taxes. These were concessions
not given to the other nationalities. As in Ulster, the relationship between the
rulers and our people would change from year to year. Sometimes, our people were
left alone in Pennsylvania and given liberal treatment. Other times they were
not treated so well-- treatment would ebb and flow.
COMMENT
I have not been able to find a book on Pennsylvania that
specifically tells what it was like living there between the years 1724 and
1734, when our people were there.
Other nationalities lived in Pennsylvania before William Penn
receive his charter in 1681. Pennsylvania would remain a colony until the
Revolutionary War. Because it was a social experiment, there were many rapid
changes. Forms of government were tried, discarded, modified, tried again. There
were problems.
I have taken from various sources the history of Pennsylvania
as a whole, over many years, and tried to tell the story as I assumed it
affected our people during the years they lived there.
There are many books on William Penn and his founding of "Utopia,"
Pennsylvania, at your local library.
In 1737, our people finally got title to their land in
Pennsylvania. However, by that time they were long gone, to Virginia. "…so the
land was never lifted or surveyed." I had to look that one up in the dictionary.
"Lifted," meant to retire a mortgage, or raise the status of the land to a
higher level, in this case from squatter to ownership.
Thanks again to Ruth Petracek and other historians for information and graphics used in this chapter.
Note: If you would like to know
more about the Woods-Wallace illustrious heritage then go to my Home Page.
Home Page
www.thetracyfamilyhistory.net


